Orlando Sentinel

Cubs looking ahead

After magical ’15, GM Epstein eager for next season

- Associated Press

CHICAGO — A day later, Theo Epstein was ready to start again. Next season can’t come soon enough for the Cubs executive after Chicago wrapped up a year he described Thursday as “magical.”

The Cubs put five consecutiv­e losing seasons behind them and emerged as one of the best teams in baseball, led by young players and veterans and a manager in Joe Maddon who pulled all the right strings in getting the franchise back in the postseason.

It ended Wednesday with the New York Mets completing a four-game sweep in the NL Championsh­ip Series, but the Cubs already believe they have what it takes to contend again next season.

“We know what we have here,” All-Star rookie Kris Bryant said.

What they have is a team that often started four rookies, won 97 games and then knocked out the two teams that finished with better records — NL Central rivals St. Louis and Pittsburgh — in the playoffs. They came up short against New York’s young arms, and it left a desire for more.

“We can’t get to opening day fast enough,” said Epstein, the club’s president of baseball operations and the executive credited the most with overhaulin­g the Cubs.

Epstein, like Maddon, would like to add pitching before the opener. That’s not the only item on his to-do list. NL Cy Young candidate Jake Arrieta is eligible for arbitratio­n and figures to get a big raise after leading the majors with 22 wins.

There are some other issues to address. Here are some things to look for as the Cubs prepare for next year:

Arms race: There will be plenty of speculatio­n about David Price coming to the Cubs. The 2012 AL Cy Young Award winner would fit nicely next season at the top of the rotation alongside Arrieta and Jon Lester. Don’t dismiss his history with Maddon from their time together in Tampa Bay or the fact that the Cubs look like they are poised to contend for at least the next few years. Then again, the price will be high and the Cubs did give Lester a $155 million deal last offseason. Cheaper options might be John Lackey or former Cub Jeff Samardzija. A trade involving Starlin Castro and a prospect or two might be a possibilit­y.

Front and center: The Cubs could have a hole to fill at the top of the order and in center field with Dexter Fowler’s contract expiring. In his first season in Chicago, he wound up fourth in the NL with a career-high 102 runs despite a slow start. Epstein would love to keep Fowler, saying he made “a wonderful impression.”

Catcher or outfielder? For a guy who began the year in Double-A, Kyle Schwarber made quite an impression with 16 homers and 43 RBIs in 69 games. In the playoffs, he set a club-record with five home runs. But he also struggled in left field in the NLCS. And the question remains — is he a catcher or an outfielder? For now, Epstein said the plan is to continue developing him at both spots.

 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cubs president Theo Epstein, whose 5-year contract expires after next season, is eager for the ’16 campaign.
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/ASSOCIATED PRESS Cubs president Theo Epstein, whose 5-year contract expires after next season, is eager for the ’16 campaign.

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